10 results on '"Snook, Brent"'
Search Results
2. Quality vs. quantity: the effect of relationship and number of corroborators on alibi assessments.
- Author
-
Eastwood J, Lively CJ, Snook B, and Snow MD
- Abstract
The effect of the suspect-corroborator relationship and number of corroborators on alibi assessments was examined across two experiments. In both experiments, we explored the effect of relationship type and number of corroborators on believability, likelihood of guilt, and decision to retain the suspect as the primary suspect; we increased the social distance between the alibi provider and suspect and the size of difference between the number of corroborators in Experiment 2. Collectively, our results support Olson and Wells' taxonomy of alibi believability as (a) any form of person evidence mitigates pre-alibi judgments of guilt (although there is a ceiling effect), and (b) alibis corroborated by non-motivated others were judged more favourably than those corroborated by motivated others. Our results lend support toward extending the original taxonomy to include the number of corroborators. The implications for the alibi assessments are discussed., (© 2020 The Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. An Evaluation of Interrater Reliability Measures on Binary Tasks Using d-Prime .
- Author
-
Grant MJ, Button CM, and Snook B
- Abstract
Many indices of interrater agreement on binary tasks have been proposed to assess reliability, but none has escaped criticism. In a series of Monte Carlo simulations, five such indices were evaluated using d-prime , an unbiased indicator of raters' ability to distinguish between the true presence or absence of the characteristic being judged. Phi and, to a lesser extent, Kappa coefficients performed best across variations in characteristic prevalence, and raters' expertise and bias. Correlations with d-prime for Percentage Agreement , Scott's Pi , and Gwet's AC
1 were markedly lower. In situations where two raters make a series of binary judgments, the findings suggest that researchers should choose Phi or Kappa to assess interrater agreement as the superiority of these indices was least influenced by variations in the decision environment and characteristics of the decision makers., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Language style matching and police interrogation outcomes.
- Author
-
Richardson BH, Taylor PJ, Snook B, Conchie SM, and Bennell C
- Subjects
- Canada, Humans, Verbal Behavior, Interviews as Topic, Language, Police
- Abstract
This research examined the coordination of interrogator and suspects' verbal behavior in interrogations. Sixty-four police interrogations were examined at the aggregate and utterance level using a measure of verbal mimicry known as Language Style Matching. Analyses revealed an interaction between confession and the direction of language matching. Interrogations containing a confession were characterized by higher rates of the suspect matching the interrogators' language style than interrogations without a confession. A sequence analysis of utterance-level Language Style Matching revealed a divergence in the type of matching that occurred across outcome. There was a linear increase in interrogator-led matching for interrogations containing a confession and an increase in suspect-led matching for nonconfession interrogations. These findings suggest that police interrogations play out, in part, at the basic level of language coordination.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The effect of listenability factors on the comprehension of police cautions.
- Author
-
Eastwood J and Snook B
- Subjects
- Adult, Canada, Female, Humans, Male, Single-Blind Method, Civil Rights, Communication, Comprehension, Law Enforcement
- Abstract
We examined the extent to which modifying a police caution using three listenability factors (Instructions, Listing, and Explanations) improved comprehension. A 2 (Instructions vs. No Instructions) × 2 (Listing vs. No Listing) × 2 (Explanations vs. No Explanations) between-participants design was used. Participants (N = 160) were presented verbally with one of eight cautions and asked to record their understanding of the legal rights contained in the caution. Results showed a main effect of Explanations, thus suggesting that repeating the information contained in the caution in different terms increased comprehension. Partial support was also found for the hypothesized additive interactions of modifications, as the caution containing all three modifications resulted in the highest level of comprehension. The implications of these findings for the comprehension of police cautions, and verbally delivered information in general, are discussed.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Simply criminal: predicting burglars' occupancy decisions with a simple heuristic.
- Author
-
Snook B, Dhami MK, and Kavanagh JM
- Subjects
- Adult, Cities, Crime prevention & control, Criminal Law, Forecasting, Humans, Models, Psychological, Newfoundland and Labrador, Photography, Theft legislation & jurisprudence, Young Adult, Decision Making, Housing, Prisoners psychology, Theft psychology
- Abstract
Rational choice theories of criminal decision making assume that offenders weight and integrate multiple cues when making decisions (i.e., are compensatory). We tested this assumption by comparing how well a compensatory strategy called Franklin's Rule captured burglars' decision policies regarding residence occupancy compared to a non-compensatory strategy (i.e., Matching Heuristic). Forty burglars each decided on the occupancy of 20 randomly selected photographs of residences (for which actual occupancy was known when the photo was taken). Participants also provided open-ended reports on the cues that influenced their decisions in each case, and then rated the importance of eight cues (e.g., deadbolt visible) over all decisions. Burglars predicted occupancy beyond chance levels. The Matching Heuristic was a significantly better predictor of burglars' decisions than Franklin's Rule, and cue use in the Matching Heuristic better corresponded to the cue ecological validities in the environment than cue use in Franklin's Rule. The most important cue in burglars' models was also the most ecologically valid or predictive of actual occupancy (i.e., vehicle present). The majority of burglars correctly identified the most important cue in their models, and the open-ended technique showed greater correspondence between self-reported and captured cue use than the rating over decision technique. Our findings support a limited rationality perspective to understanding criminal decision making, and have implications for crime prevention.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Comprehending Canadian police cautions: are the rights to silence and legal counsel understandable?
- Author
-
Eastwood J and Snook B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Canada, Female, Humans, Male, Reading, Sex Factors, Speech Perception, Young Adult, Civil Rights legislation & jurisprudence, Comprehension, Crime legislation & jurisprudence, Lawyers legislation & jurisprudence, Police legislation & jurisprudence, Self Disclosure
- Abstract
Comprehension of a Canadian police right to silence caution and a right to legal counsel caution was examined. Each caution was first presented verbally in its entirety, followed by its sentence-by-sentence presentation in written format. Participants (N = 56) were asked to indicate, after each presentation, their understanding of the caution. When delivered in verbal format, 4 and 7% of participants fully understood the right to silence and legal counsel cautions, respectively. However, 48 and 32% of participants fully understood the right to silence and legal counsel cautions, respectively, when delivered in written format. Comprehension of the cautions was not influenced by gender, experience with the caution, or whether the caution was interpreted by a police recruit or regular student. The implications of the results for statement admissibility and protection of suspects' rights are discussed., (2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Validities and abilities in criminal profiling: a critique of the studies conducted by Richard Kocsis and his colleagues.
- Author
-
Bennell C, Jones NJ, Taylor PJ, and Snook B
- Subjects
- Humans, Clinical Competence, Crime psychology, Forensic Psychiatry methods, Forensic Psychiatry standards, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
In a recent issue of this journal, Kocsis reviewed the criminal profiling research that he and his colleagues have conducted during the past 4 years. Their research examines the correlates of profile accuracy with respect to the skills of the individual constructing the profile, and it has led Kocsis to draw conclusions that are important to the profiling field. In this article, the authors review the contributions of the Kocsis studies and critique their methodological and conceptual foundations. The authors raise a number of concerns and argue that data from the Kocsis studies fail to support many of the conclusions presented in his recent review. The authors present evidence in support of their assertions and provide recommendations that will allow future research in the area to generate data that are more meaningful and generalizable.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Recognizing National Hockey League greatness with an ignorance-based heuristic.
- Author
-
Snook B and Cullen RM
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Hockey, Humans, Knowledge, Male, Newfoundland and Labrador, Statistics, Nonparametric, Decision Making, Judgment, Recognition, Psychology
- Abstract
This study examined whether people adhered to the recognition heuristic (i.e., inferred that a recognized hockey player had more total career points than an unrecognized player) and whether using this heuristic could yield accurate decisions. On paired comparisons, having participants report whether they recognized each player plus any knowledge they had about each player permitted players to be classified as either unrecognized (UR), merely recognized (MR), or recognized with additional knowledge (RK), thus producing six possible trial types. Participants adhered to the recognition heuristic on 95% of MR-UR trials and were accurate on 81% of those trials. They chose the recognized player on 98% of RK-UR trials, yielding 94% accuracy. Women had less knowledge and recognized fewer players than men, yet they were nearly as accurate as men. Future research should examine the conditions under which the recognition heuristic is an adaptive strategy.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Predicting the home location of serial offenders: a preliminary comparison of the accuracy of human judges with a geographic profiling system.
- Author
-
Snook B, Canter D, and Bennell C
- Subjects
- Adult, Algorithms, England, Female, Forecasting, Homicide, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Residence Characteristics, Spatial Behavior, Statistics, Nonparametric, Criminology methods, Decision Support Techniques
- Abstract
The accuracy with which human judges, before and after 'training', could predict the likely home location of serial offenders was compared with predictions produced by a geographic profiling system known as Dragnet. All predictions were derived from ten spatial displays, one for each of ten different U.S. serial murderers, indicating five crime locations. In all conditions participants were asked to place an 'X' on each spatial display corresponding to where they thought the offender lived. In the control condition, a comparison was made between the accuracy of these predictions for 21 participants on two separate occasions a few minutes apart. In the experimental condition, between their first and second predictions the 21 participants were given two heuristics to follow--distance-decay and circle hypothesis. Results showed that participants with no previous knowledge of geographic profiling were able to use the two heuristics to improve the accuracy of their predictions. The overall accuracy of the second set of predictions for the experimental group was also not significantly different from the accuracy of predictions generated by Dragnet., (Copyright 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.